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Zhou Family of Shandong Immigrant Fushun

The origin of the clock is:

Origin 1:

Blasting, the third brother of Yan, the last king of the Song State in the Warring States Period, originated from Zi's surname and changed his surname to Shi after avoiding disaster. Later, blast called Zhong Lie the ancestor of Zhong. In the twenty-ninth year of Zhou Nanwang (286 BC), the State of Song was destroyed by the allied forces of Qi, Chu and Wei, and a high wind rushed to Xuzhou (now Xuchang, Henan). In order to avoid disaster, he changed his son's surname to Zhong from generation to generation. Dai Yan is a descendant of the Duke of Song Dynasty, and Dai Gong can be traced back to Wei's younger brother Wei Zhongyan, who was the founding father of Song State. Wei and Wei Zhongyan are brothers of Zhou, the last king of Shang Dynasty, and they are the eldest son and the second son respectively. It is an ancestral contract dating back to the 30 th generation from Wei Ziqi in Shang Dynasty. Qi is the half-brother of his son Di Yao. Di Ku's father is Ji Jiao, and Ji Jiao's father is Xuan Tao. Xuantao's father is Emperor Xuanyuan.

Origin 2:

Originated from the won surname, and later changed to the compound surname Li Zhongsuo. Judging from the fiefs of the descendants of Boyi in Zhou Dynasty, it belongs to the national title. At the beginning of the Zhou Dynasty, Zhou Wuwang sealed the descendants of Boyi, the leader of the ancient Dongyi ethnic group, in the middle and later Jianzhong, also known as Tonglu State, which was a small vassal state. The viscount and the monarch call Li Zhong. Zhong originally belonged to Shandong, and moved to the middle reaches of Huaihe River (now Bengbu, Anhui) in the early Eastern Zhou Dynasty. By the middle of the Spring and Autumn Period, Li Zhong was captured by the powerful Chu State in the seventh year of Zhou Jingji's reign as King Gui (the third year of Chu Ling Xiong Qian, 538 BC), and Li Zhong was forced to become a subordinate of Chu State. Later, King Chu Ling allowed him to restore the country, but he became a vassal state of Chu. The title of the country was reduced to "Jun", and the territory was limited to Li Zhong (now Shuangdun Village, Xiaobangbu Town, Bengbu, Anhui).

Another view is that Li Zhong's surname comes from his son's surname. For example, the Book of the Tang Dynasty Prime Minister's Lineage Table records: "Zhong's family came from Zi's family, also after the imperial clan was Jin Bozong. Bozong Zizhou is a scholar of Chu. His food is collected from Li, because he thinks his surname is Chu. During the Han Dynasty, Li Zhongmei was a general of Xiang Yu. He had two sons, who lived in Jiujiang, and still took the second son as the successor, living in Yingchuan, and his long club was Zhong. There are many doubts about this record. For example, why do most historical materials think that Bozhou is a branch of Li (Ji surname)? Why don't Li Zhongmei's two sons change their surnames together? This is more like mixing Yingchuan's clock with Jiujiang's to seek a common origin.

Origin 3:

Duke Chu originated from Mi's family and was sealed in Zhong Wu's country, then Zhong Wu's family. In the Eastern Zhou Dynasty, my viscount made a fief and established the "Kingdom of Wu in China", now xinyi city, Jiangsu. Suqian is a child country of Zhong Wu, and later belongs to the State of Chu. In 5 12 BC, Zhong Wuguo was merged into Wu. In the fourth year (47 BC1), Zhou Yuanwang was recovered by the State of Chu.

Origin 4:

Zhong Qiang, who originated from Qiang and Tuguhun tribes, transliterated Chinese characters as his surname in Lintao, Gansu Province in the Western Han Dynasty, and later changed his surname from Chinese.

During the reign of Emperor Xiaowen of the Northern Wei Dynasty, TaBaHong (), there were Qiang people attached to it, and Emperor Xiaowen of the Northern Wei Dynasty specially gave him the surname Zhong and the full name Zhong You. His descendants have become clocks ever since. After the Qin and Han Dynasties, the northern tribes gradually became stronger and invaded and expanded to the south. In the Wei, Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties, the war in the north continued year after year, and the regime in the Central Plains changed frequently. A large number of northern nationalities entered the Central Plains, and the people of the Central Plains moved south and east. In the Northern and Southern Dynasties, the Qiang people of Tuguhun tribe in the Northern Wei Dynasty and the Qiang people of Minshan Mountain in northern Sichuan in the Tang Dynasty were both surnamed Zhong.

Origin 5:

Originated from She nationality, it belongs to Han nationality and changed its surname to surname. Among the ethnic minorities, the largest Zhong family is the She nationality, which is said to be the descendant of Boyi. According to legend, Pan Hu, the ancestor of She nationality, had three sons and one daughter. The three sons are Pan (Pan Geng), Lan (Lan Guanghui) and Lei respectively, and the daughter is Princess Longlang. Later, a young Han man named Zhong married Princess Longlang, so he changed from the Han nationality to the She nationality, bringing the Zhong surname of the Han nationality into the She nationality. Zhong became the ancestor of Zhong family of She nationality. In the Sui Dynasty, there was a slang surname Zhong in Lingnan, probably around Zhongshan and Hezhou in Guangxi today. The ancestors of Zhong surname of She nationality, these ethnic minorities have lived together with Han nationality for a long time, gradually assimilated, and the degree of sinicization is very high.

Zhong Shi clan of She nationality is mainly distributed in Fujian, Zhejiang, Jiangxi, Guangdong, Guangxi and other provinces.

Origin six:

Originated from Mongols, it belongs to Chinese culture and changed its surname to surname. According to the historical book A Brief Introduction to Manchu Eight Banners Surnames by Tongzhi Clans in Qing Dynasty, Mongolian Zhong Jishi lived in Yehe (now Lishu, Jilin), Fushun (now Fushun, Liaoning), Wolfwood (now southeast of Xing 'an League, Inner Mongolia) and other places. Later, Manchu was taken as the surname, and Manchu was Qiongjihara.

After the mid-Qing Dynasty, Zhong Jishi's Han surname in Mongolian and Manchu languages was Zhong Jishi.

Origin seven:

Originated from Manchu, it belongs to Han culture and changed its surname to surname. According to the historical records "Qing Dynasty annals, clans, Manchu Eight Banners":

(1) The Manchu Zongjia nationality, also known as Zhou Jia nationality, or transliterated as Zhongji nationality, with the Manchu pinyin Jonggiya Hala, was taken by the Wuhuan Department of Xianbei in Liaodong at the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, and then gradually evolved into the Liaodong Nuzhen who lived in Uighur (now the upper reaches of Heilongjiang or Nenjiang River). Later, many Guan Han surnames were Zhong Shi and Zhou Shi.

(2) Manchu feels Roche, Manchu is Giorohara, followed by Zhong.

Origin 8:

Originated from Yi people, it belongs to Han culture and changed its surname to surname.

Zhong family of Yi nationality originated from Zhong Richi and Zhong La family of Diomi. Later, in the Ming Dynasty, the province was changed to a single China surname Zhong, which was passed down from generation to generation.